Cabling: I exclusively use CAT6 STP cables. The ones I use currently is from MicroConnect

DNS

I am running a slightly crazy “triple-split” DNS setup.

Public internet - hazenet.dk
Out on the public internet I have this website, which is hosted by One.com, they also provide DNS for my domain.
In that DNS setup, I have a single record related to my lab/home/hourse, called “home.hazenet.dk”. That just points to my static public IP, so that I can VPN into my lab/home/house. VPN is provided by the EdgeRouter as L2TP/IPSec.

Home network - home.hazenet.dk
On the home network, which is the part that is always powered on and not related to the Lab, the DNS setup is provided by my Synology NAS. I have placed by EdgeRouter, EdgeSwitch, Unifi Controller and Synology NAS in this zone, because they are the things always powered on.
The Synology NAS also hosts simplified version of the Lab zone, which I just manually maintain. The reason for this, is so I can reach most parts of my Lab, from my laptop looking at my normal DNS server.

Lab network - lab.hazenet.dk
When the lab is booted up, the DNS setup for the lab its self is provided by a Windows Server 2012 R2 Domain Controller VM.
And when I interact with the lab, I use a jump-host-vm, so I get the “full” DNS and network integration in the lab.

Because my compute layer is this old, use a lot of electricity and generates massive amounts of heat and noise, it is only powered on when needed.
The good thing about it, is that it was completly free, provided by a community friend Flemming Riis.

And because the Intel Xeon E5450 Processors does not support “Intel VT-x with Extended Page Tables (EPT)”, I can’t do nested 64-bit Guest OS’s. And on top of that, I had some issues with enabling nested ESXi. My solution was to edit the global host config, “/etc/vmware/config”, and add the following lines:

vhv.enable = "TRUE"
answer.msg.cpuid.noVHVQuestion = "Yes"

The second line, is to answer a question that popped up on every VM on the host, after doing the “vhv.enable” line.

Storage:

I have a Synology DS1813+, 8-bay NAS, which currently have 4x WD Red Pro 2TB drives and it has been upgrade to the max of 4GB Memory.
The Synology NAS is the only thing, besides the networking, that is always powered on.
It provides the following things in my house:

NFS Storage for ESXi

SMB/AFP file storage for laptops

Video Station, for video playback on laptops, iPads, iPhones and AppleTV in the house

DNS server for daily use in the house, and convient DNS function to reach main parts of my lab.

CrashPlan, via http://packages.pcloadletter.co.uk Synology Community package source. I use CrashPlan on my Laptops, which do backup both to my Synology NAS and to CrashPlan Central cloud storage. My Synology NAS it self, does backup of its own content via CrashPlan only to CrashPlan Central cloud storage.